Why building an operating system from scratch?

What happens if you turn on a PC? How is an operating system able to run multiple tasks in parallel? What happens if you hit a key on your keyboard? And what actually is a process? If you have ever thought for more than a second about one of these things, then read on…

A few years back, actually in late 2010 or early 2011, I was at a point where my growing interest in computer science naturally lead me to those questions. So I did what most of us would probably do – I started to search for information on this and tried to understand what I got.

One day, I hit upon a tutorial that explained the boot process of a PC, and actually contained a short instruction on how to write a very simple program that would act as a boot loader – you would copy this program to a floppy disk (yes, that still existed in some machines at this time) or a CD-ROM and boot from there, and – voila – instead of a Windows or Linux coming up, the system would run your program and print some deep wisdom like “Hello World!” onto the screen.

Now printing something is easy, but what if I wanted the user to be able to enter something and print a response? Obviously, this requires some sort of communication with the keyboard and there is no operating system around that can help you with that, so I needed to learn about a thing called keyboard controller. But wait, why could I only use a few kB of memory? I found that I needed to switch from real mode to protected mode, install interrupt handlers … and slowly, the attempt to just build something that would boot turned into more.

Over the next roughly 18 months, I continued to walk down this path, and eventually had build a small Unix operating system kernel. I then added a simple command line interface, graphics mode and a C library and eventually got to a point where I was able to take simple programs originally written for Linux or other Unix-like operating systems, and compile and run them on my new operating system, which I did call ctOS. Here is a screenshot – my OS is running in a virtual machine on the left, and on the right you see a few measurements of the physical CPU load while running some multi-threading tests within ctOS.

As you might imagine, this required quite some work, and I eventually got to a point where I spend more time working on other things and further development came to an end.

Earlier this year, I was cleaning up a few things on my hard drive and – more or less by accident – hit upon my old code archive again. Being a curious person, I was wondering whether I would still be able to compile and run the system – and of course it badly failed when I tried it. This was not really surprising – my development environment had changed from a 32 bit system to a 64 bit system, and the emulators that I used to run and test the OS had changed quite a bit as well, fixing defects that did actually hide away some bugs in my OS. And of course the “average PC” had changed quite a lot since 2011. The BIOS is now a thing of the past, PCs use UEFI to boot and ACPI tables to store their configuration instead of BIOS tables, and you will hardly ever find a system with a floppy disk drive and only one CPU any more.

So I decided to invest some time to make my OS work again and to adapt it to the current generation of hardware. This included building a new development environment, fixing some defects that become suddenly apparent as the emulator had changed, making the system ACPI aware, removing all dependencies on the BIOS etc. I did also clean up the source code and migrated everything to a Github repository and added a few additional ports.

I have a realistic view on how much time I will probably have in the future to further develop and improve my OS. However, it can still serve a purpose – education. After all, this is what it was created for: helping me to understand some of the inner workings of an operating system.

In fact, my plan is to publish a series of blog posts on the principles and structures behind a Unix operating system, using ctOS to illustrate these concepts and linking to the documentation I have created over the years for the details. This will cover topics like the overall structure of an operating system, processes and the scheduler, interrupts, memory management, device driver and the networking stack. So if you ever wanted to understand how an operating system really works this is the time for you to learn it – stay tuned and join me again for the first part of the series. Until then, you might want to check out the ctOS source code on Github and the documentation that comes with it – if you want, you can even download some of the binary packages on the release page and play with it.

Search

Search for:

About me

Being a mathematician by education, I enjoy digging into topics from mathematics, computer science and physics – and even more, I enjoy when all this comes together. I hope that some of that curiosity comes across in my posts – have fun.